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Ebay Fined $61M By French Court For Sales of Fake Goods

Journal written by lpq (583377) and posted by timothy on Tuesday July 01, @11:34AM
from the france-v.-the-internet-continued dept.

A court in France ordered eBay to pay more than 61 mega-dollars to the parent company (LVMH) of Givenchy, Fendi, Marc Jacobs and Louis Vuitton, because a user sold fake goods on the website. eBay has been sued by other 'luxury goods' vendors (such as Tiffany's (US), Rolex (Germany) and L'Oreal (EU)). Problems stem from some companies demanding that their merchandise (even legal merchandise) not be displayed nor sold as it is a violation of their 'property.' Others have complained that eBay is too slow to take down claims. Apparently eBay was hit with two violations: 1) eBay illegally allowed legitimately purchased and owned products made by LVMH to be resold on its website by 3rd parties not under the control of LVMH, and 2) not doing enough to protect LVMH's brands from illegal sales. eBay has said it will appeal. So eBay is to know what products every company allows to be sold before allowing them to on auction?

(There's also coverage at Yahoo News.)

Update: 07/01 17:15 GMT by T : That's LVMH throughout, rather than LVHM, as originally rendered.

Related Stories

[+] News: eBay Beats Tiffany In Net Trademark Case 44 comments
sm62704 notes a Reuters story reporting that eBay has beat Tiffany in court in a "knockout" decision. If this had gone the other way, not only would eBay be in trouble (especially after the loss of a similar case in France), but so would Net commerce as a whole. Tiffany seems certain to appeal. "All of Tiffany's trademark infringement claims against eBay were rejected — a knockout blow to the four-year-old lawsuit that had been closely watched by Internet companies as well as luxury goods makers seeking to stop the sale of counterfeit products online. Tiffany & Co. had alleged that eBay turned a blind eye to the sale of fake Tiffany silver jewelry on its site. EBay had countered that it was not in a position to determine which goods were knock-offs... and had said the jeweler did not adequately participate in eBay's programs that help brand owners prevent fraud. The judge... said he was 'not unsympathetic' to Tiffany and others who have invested in building their brands only to see them exploited on the Web. But he said the law was clearly on eBay's side."
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  • by elrous0 (869638) * on Tuesday July 01, @11:35AM (#24016511)
    The French government and courts have a long history of issuing prejudiced laws and decisions in favor of French companies (especially in cases where the opposition are American or British companies), but this is disturbing even by their standards. While ostensibly about counterfeit goods, this ruling goes FAR beyond that--giving the original producer full control of resell rights for even LEGITIMATE goods. In short, the ruling (if allowed to stand) basically says that no one actually owns any physical object anymore or can resell said object without permission of the original producer.

    Want to resell your Corrola? Sorry, you have to get Toyota's permission first.

    Want to resell your house? Not unless the original builder says okay!

    Want to sell your soul? Well, that one you can do. Just become a French judge!

    • by haystor (102186) on Tuesday July 01, @11:36AM (#24016553)

      The French companies are laughing until they're sued by the raw goods producing companies and told they can't distribute their handbags.

    • So basically like what we have in the music and software worlds pretty much? You don't quite own that CD, you're just allowed to use it because the product they leased to you is on it ... something like that?
    • And yet they wonder why the French Echonomy is sagging.
      If the seller fears retribution from using and reslling french products. They will not get French products in the first place. 3rd party sales while doesn't direcly effect the bottom line it does get product awarenes of your goods.

      If you get a used Toyota and you love it. If you choose to get a new car you may buy a Toyota. or other perople see that your used toyota has lased so long and they want a new car they would get a new Toyota, also the person who has sold the car if they liked it the chances are they would use the money to buy a new car of the same make, if they have brand loyality to that make.

      I understand forgeries, as it could tarnish the brand names. But for legit items let them resell them.

      • by sjbe (173966) on Tuesday July 01, @12:35PM (#24017459)

        I understand forgeries, as it could tarnish the brand names. But for legit items let them resell them.

        You are right of course but eBay's problem is that eBay cannot be bothered to seriously check. The ONLY way to be reasonably sure an item is not a fake is to inspect it in person and have a full documentation trail detailing who bought it, where they bought it, and when. This is what they do in the art world to authenticate pieces. Since eBay never physically inspects ANY merchandise sold on their site, there is no way they can possible determine if an item is a fake.

        From my own experience I've sold some high end luxury goods on consignment through eBay. (Louis Vuitton, Gucci, Rolex, etc) In each case I had a full documentation trail, the parties were known to me or my close associates, and we had the items physically inspected by an expert in that merchandise to ensure authenticity. Through eBay's VeRO [ebay.com] program we were accused several times of pedaling fakes even though we had the real thing. There was no opportunity for us to prove that we had authentic merchandise though we certainly could have done so were there any means to plead our case. Our auctions were summarily taken down and we were given strikes with no recourse of any kind. To be sure there are a TON of actual fakes on eBay but eBay sure as hell can't tell the difference. Worse, to avoid lawsuits they've given brand holders full power to remove auctions that they should have no power to influence under the first sale doctrine [wikipedia.org].

        The problem is that eBay's incentives are all wrong - they just want their fees and no lawsuits - and they've handed responsibility (through VeRO) to trademark and brand holders whose incentives actually contradict the law. Louis Vuitton doesn't want ANY of their products sold via eBay regardless of authenticity. So eBay users get screwed in the deal either way. Sellers can have their auctions pulled for no good reason and buyers can't be reasonably sure of authentic products because eBay refuses to check. The winners here are definitely not you and me.

        • by croddy (659025) * on Tuesday July 01, @12:46PM (#24017609)

          VERO is also the program through which Ebay has given Scientology carte blanche to illegally infringe on first-sale rights of people with used RTC gear. Until Ebay takes a modicum of responsibility for the rampant and obvious illegal abuse of VERO (or cancels it altogether) I want nothing to do with Ebay.

          Unfortunately, everything Ebay's help pages say about canceling your account is a falsehood. I've been asking them to close my account since February and I am still able to log in and I still get their weekly spam messages about my favorite sellers.

          Ebay was cool back when it had something resembling competition. Now it's just another bloated, useless pig doing the bare minimum it must to continue collecting monopoly rents.

      • 3rd party sales while doesn't direcly effect the bottom line it does get product awarenes of your goods.

        I would say it DOES affect the bottom line. Let's say I'm choosing between a Toyota and a Honda, pretty much equivalent models for $20,000 each. If I know I can resell the Toyota five years from now for $10,000 but that Honda won't let me resell the Honda ever, well, the Toyota just became a lot cheaper than the Honda in the long run!

        Now, some people may not think this way when it comes to designer bags - but a LOT do. There are many women who can only afford to carry around a collection of $500-1000 bags because they keep one for a couple of months then sell it to a consignment shop for half price to help buy the next one. Still an expensive hobby, but suddenly within the reach of someone who's upper-middle-class instead of only celebrities.

    • by Ed Avis (5917) <ed@membled.com> on Tuesday July 01, @12:41PM (#24017535) Homepage
      Indeed, this has little to do with counterfeiting. From the BBC news article [bbc.co.uk]:

      Four perfume brands - Dior, Guerlain, Kenzo and Givenchy - sued for what they called "illicit sales" of their products.
      They alleged that even auctions involving their legitimate perfumes were illegal, because only specialist dealers were permitted to sell them.
      The court barred eBay from selling the four perfumes in future.

      It will be interesting to see what Brussels has to say about this.

    • "The French government and courts have a long history of issuing prejudiced laws and decisions in favor of French companies"

      The US Government and courts have a long history of issuing prejudiced laws and decisions in favour of US companies (look at online gambling and a billion other things)

      The British Government and courts have a long history of issuing prejudiced laws and decisions in favour of British companies (see the fiasco around BAE systems and the serious fraud office being stopped from investigating them for "National Security" reasons)

      Everyone's at it. And the people of the whole world are the losers.

  • First sale? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by llamalad (12917) on Tuesday July 01, @11:37AM (#24016563)

    Does France not have anything along the lines of the 'first sale' doctrine?

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First-sale_doctrine [wikipedia.org]

  • L@@K (Score:5, Funny)

    by larry bagina (561269) on Tuesday July 01, @11:38AM (#24016581) Journal
    A++ douchebags, would sue again.
  • by ciscoguy01 (635963) on Tuesday July 01, @11:51AM (#24016783)
    Received from eBay yesterday, revised user agreement and privacy policy terms. What a coincidence!

    Received: Jun-30-08
    Changes to the eBay User Agreement and Privacy Policy

    I'm writing to let you know that the eBay User Agreement and eBay Privacy Policy have been updated, effective immediately for new users and on August 13, 2008, for current users.

    The most important thing to keep in mind about this update is that your rights, and our responsibilities, under the User Agreement and Privacy Policy have changed very little. This update was spurred by an international project, rolling out now, that will make the user agreements and privacy policies for eBay platforms around the world much more consistent. This way, when you interact with any eBay platform around the world, you can be sure that very similar policies apply to you no matter where you do your transactions.

    There is one substantive change to our User Agreement I'd like to point out. We changed the "Content" and "Liability" sections to accommodate a new program we're rolling out worldwide. That program makes catalogs of content and product descriptions available to sellers, so they can easily include complete and up-to-date product information for the items they list.

    Similarly, we've revised the Privacy Policy's "Disclosure" section to make sure that the language we've used there accurately reflects the ways in which we're transferring information between companies in the eBay Inc. corporate family to streamline services, fight fraud and provide you with the best, most relevant experience when you use any of the sites or services of the eBay corporate family.

    With these changes, we continue to make sure that our legal documents are consistent with the ways our sites and services are evolving and that we meet the needs of our user community. We hope you'll agree that these changes will make the eBay sites and services work better for you. If you accept the new User Agreement and Privacy Policy, you don't need to take any action. If you do not wish to accept the new User Agreement or Privacy Policy, please refer to our Help pages for instructions on how to close your account.

    Thank you for using eBay and we look forward to many more successful transactions!

    Sincerely,

    Scott Shipman Senior Counsel -- Global Privacy Practices eBay Inc.

    The important change is in the liability section:

    Liability
    You will not hold eBay responsible for other users' content, actions or inactions, or items they list. You acknowledge that we are not a traditional auctioneer. Instead, the sites are a venue to allow anyone to offer, sell, and buy just about anything, at anytime, from anywhere, in a variety of pricing formats and venues, such as stores, fixed price formats and auction-style formats. We are not involved in the actual transaction between buyers and sellers. We have no control over and do not guarantee the quality, safety or legality of items advertised, the truth or accuracy of users' content or listings, the ability of sellers to sell items, the ability of buyers to pay for items, or that a buyer or seller will actually complete a transaction.

    We do not transfer legal ownership of items from the seller to the buyer, and nothing in this agreement shall modify the governing provisions of California Commercial Code 2401(2) and Uniform Commercial Code 2-401(2), under which legal ownership of an item is transferred upon physical delivery of the item to the buyer by the seller. Unless the buyer and the seller agree otherwise, the buyer will become the item's lawful owner upon physical receipt of the item from the seller, in accordance with California Commercial Code 2401(2) and Uniform Commercial Code 2-401(2). Further, we cannot guarantee continuous or secure access to our services, and operation of the sites may be interfered with by numerous factors outside of our control. According

  • Stupid and dangerous (Score:5, Interesting)

    by khton (1146311) on Tuesday July 01, @11:51AM (#24016785)

    This is not the first time that French courts show a complete misunderstanding of how the Internet works... And this goes even further than net economics.

    Most french used cars are still sold via a single newspaper called "La Centrale des Particuliers". Should this newspaper verify that each car is rightfully owned by its seller ? I cannot imagine any judge trying to enforce this...

    Hopefully, this judgment shall be broken by the "Cour de Cassation", because it does not make any sense. Maybe the judge was only trying to get some publicity. This happens a lot,

  • by jd.schmidt (919212) on Tuesday July 01, @11:52AM (#24016791)

    While it is VERY silly to expect EBay to prevent all counterfeit items AND that whole resale of trademarked items is scary, it might point out a flaw in their business model. Consider a "consignment" store or pawn shop that takes a cut of each sale and is stocked with stolen and fake items. Eventually, if you have enough of this nonsense, I think it is fair to consider that store a fence and not a legitimate business.

    The more EBay takes a "cut" of each sale, the more they become part of the transaction. Perhaps a flat fee. I am sure EBay wants to make as much profit as possible, but if they become a party to each transaction they can't help but take on some liability.

  • Sounds like a perfect excuse for the French to stop paying sales tax. If the item doesn't actually belong to you, why should you be responsible for paying for it?

    Oh, and I think LVHM might want to explain to government why they've been hiding at least $61M of their property from the tax authorities.

  • by Noryungi (70322) on Tuesday July 01, @11:54AM (#24016833) Homepage Journal

    Before everyone gets on their high horses about this, remember:

    1) French companies sued mainly because fake goods were sold on eBay. Selling fake stuff (anywhere, on the net and off) is a big problem for French luxury companies.

    2) French companies also sued to prevent people selling real luxury goods at cut prices. This is abusive since it criminalizes legal owners and sellers in order to protect their 'official' resellers. However, eBay has appealed and I am pretty certain this will be struck down by the French courts.

    Finally, of course, this leaves the problem of certifying that, let's say a Chanel bag, is the real thing on eBay and not a fake. This could be helped by supplying some sort of authenticity voucher that sellers could produce if asked by eBay.

    That would solve the problem: eBay could simply say to a seller "please show us the voucher that says this is the genuine article or pull your offer". Yes, I know, what's to say the seller is not going to produce a fake voucher, but still.

    The thing with France right now is that they are trying to combine two things: e-commerce and checking that articles sold are genuine. Not an easy thing to pull off, and these fscking French companies are not taking the right path (suing instead of cooperating). Then again, maybe eBay just refused to cooperate, and they thought suing was the easiest way to obtain results and a more cooperative eBay.

    So - as strange as it may seem right now - this could have a positive impact on the quality of eBay auctions. Think about it for a moment, before posting stupid French jokes.

      • by elrous0 (869638) * on Tuesday July 01, @12:03PM (#24016963)
        You didn't read up on this case very well. The suing companies were not only saying that ebay had the obligation to remove counterfeit goods bearing their name, but unauthorized sales of LEGITIMATE goods as well. In other words, the companies were claiming the right to control ALL AVENUES of sale and resale of their goods (asserting that only they can authorize any sale or resale of their original product). And, sadly, the court agreed with them.
    • Blind to the facts (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Senjutsu (614542) on Tuesday July 01, @12:59PM (#24017805)

      "The Rolex trademark recordation with Customs indicates "Import of Goods Bearing Genuine Trademarks or Trade Names Restricted." This means that genuine Rolex products can only be imported with the permission of the trademark owner, Rolex Watch U.S.A. Inc. A private individual can hand carry one Rolex watch from a trip overseas without obtaining permission. Bring in more than one, and they will all be seized as a trademark violation. Purchasing a Rolex from overseas by mail is also a trademark violation." Title 19 U.S.C. 1526(a) and (b)

      Buy a legitimate Rolex from a foreign seller on eBay and try having it sent to you, and see how your tune changes.